Corvette Racing drivers Jan Magnussen and Olivier Beretta qualified
sixth and seventh respectively for Saturday's 1,000-mile/10-hour Petit
Le Mans, the season finale of the 2010 American Le Mans Series. Today's
25-minute GT qualifying session was held in warm and sunny conditions on
the 2.54-mile Road Atlanta circuit. The twin Corvettes were separated by
just .077 seconds, with Magnussen qualifying sixth at 1:20.598 in the
No. 4 Compuware Corvette C6.R, and Beretta close behind in seventh at
1:20.675 in the No. 3 Compuware Corvette C6.R.

Jaime Melo led a quartet of Ferraris in GT2 qualifying with a
pole-winning time of 1:19.889. The No. 90 BMW was fifth, and the
No. 45 Porsche eighth among the 17 entries in the hotly contested
production-based class.

Both Corvettes went out as soon as the green flag signaled the start
of the 25-minute GT qualifying session. Magnussen clocked his quickest
time on his fifth lap, while Beretta's best lap was his eighth. The two
Corvettes pitted briefly, then took the unusual step of going back out
in pursuit of quicker times, but neither driver was able to improve on
subsequent laps.

"It was difficult to get clear laps," Magnussen said. "The Ferraris
backed up on the laps when I should have had fast lap times, and that
messed up my qualifying run a little. When I finally did get a clear
lap, the tires were just past their peak.

"I'm quite pleased with the car, and everything worked well," Magnussen
reported. "It's just a shame that we couldn't show its full potential,
so we'll do that tomorrow in the race."

Beretta made a dozen laps before the conclusion of qualifying. "After
I did my good lap, I wanted to improve it," Beretta said. "That was my
time to go, but I had traffic in front of me and had to slow down. Then
I tried again, but it is never the same.

"The race will be long, and we have to work hard tomorrow," Beretta
added. "The two Corvettes are close on lap times, and I think we will be
strong in the race. We are still a long way from the end."